Mac OS X with native look. This is already much more user-friendly than our previous GTK-based releases for Mac OS X. See development details. Hopefully, this will allow us to release next view3dscene as normal Mac OS X application, that will be trivial to install for Mac OS X users.

Network (http) support. Most "FileName" parameters and properties are now URLs. You can use protocols like file: and http: and data: everywhere, and of course http will be automatically downloaded. Try view3dscene from snapshots, enable "Preferences->Download Resources From Network" and then use menu item (Ctrl+L) to load URL, or pass URL on the command-line.

This is a little user-unfriendly, as the downloading is blocking (the process waits for the download to finish, instead of letting you enjoy the game and download in the background; there isn't even any nice way to cancel the download, or even notification about it, except for --debug-log message). For this reason, it is disabled by default: you have to explicitly allow it by "Preferences->Download Resources From Network" (in code: CastleDownload.EnableNetwork variable).

view3dscene automatically downloads the model, as well as all linked resources (textures, inline models, sounds, scripts etc.). You can also use VRML/X3D Anchors to jump to any URL (for example, you can jump from a local file to a model available through http). Also data: URI handling is now more uniform. Also the engine uses now MIME types more, instead of merely file extensions. This makes us work with http transfers, and improves cooperation with data: URIs.

In a game, you could also use URLs inside files like level.xml and resource.xml. For example, you could distribute now a level.xml file that contains URLs to levels on your server, downloaded each time.

Improvements to 2D rendering. They also workaround crashes on some Mesa 9 drivers.

Support for 8 and 16 samples for anti-aliasing, there are (at least NVidia) GPUs supporting it.

Renamed our event Idle to Update.

This reflects our implementation and usage of this event clearer. This event is for continuous tasks, called even when the application is not "idle" (when application is processing something, like mouse moves). Our Update event doesn't correspond 100% to normal (as used by LCL or GTK) meaning of "idle" (which is also evidenced by code if TCastleWindow LCL and GTK backends, that cannot simply use LCL/GTK "idle" concepts to implement our Update).

TCastleControl.AggressiveUpdate* are removed. The (simplified and improved) version of this mechanism is now always "on" and automatically makes mouse look work better. It's still not perfect (it seems LCL event loop is just too slow to process events during mouse look fast enough), but it's better now. If you want perfectly smooth mouse look, you should still consider TCastleWindow instead of TCastleControl.